EnglishRebel
Retired Rebel Reefer
WaterKeeper<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=13618198#post13618198 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by WaterKeeper
For those of you that hate it when you can't read an unformated post send the hate mail to Paul.
Don't worry Paul I fixed it.
I don't place ich in my tank just for fun. I'm testing my new miracle cure that involves dosing with boiled turnip juice.
Alan,
I know what you are driving at but fish can also carry the parasite's cysts in their intestine and it enters the tank via the fish's feces. That's why the full length Q-tank period is a good idea.
Sorry to be pedantic about this but I'm trying to understand what goes on in a QT tank. What I was getting at in my OP was that the parasite requires a host fish to live, so as long as there is a fish in the QT how do we know that the parasite has died. Does that make sense?
Okay - assuming the newly acquired fish has ich. We put it in a QT tank for 4 weeks. During that time the parasite drops of the fish and remains dormant on the bottom of the tank. After its dormant time it reappears and attaches itself to the fish again (sorry I'm not using all of the biological states of the parasite).
My basic question was - how do we know it's gone after 4 weeks or 4 months for that matter because all the time it has a host fish to support its life cycle?